anyone know where i can get the old WWII airfield for fs9? Tsilli-Tsill(pronounced silly-silly)? i tried making it but i admit to not being able to figure scenery creating out.
http://www.pacificwrecks.com/airfields/png/tsili-tsili/tsili-tsili-5-12- 4.jpg theres an image
Tsili Tsili Morobe Province | Papua New Guinea
Lat 6° 50' 60S Long 146° 22' 0E Pronounced "Silly-Silly". This small highlands town had an airfield that was used by the Americans and Australians.
Tsili Tsili (Marilinan, Tsile-Tsile)
Also know as Maralinin and sometimes spelled Tsile-Tsile it was actually 5th Air Force General Kenney's wish that the field be renamed, as he thought the name demeaning, and of propaganda value if captured by the Japanese.
Construction
The field was Hastily constructed by the 871st Airborne Engineering, the 41st Fighter Squadron was based there for a time. All supplies, food, fuel and equipment had to be flown into the base via C-47's from Port Moresby. Wartime photo May 12, 1944.
Walter Seale of the 871st Airborne Engineer Battalion remembers:
"A lot of cripples landed at Tsilli-Tsilli, and later Gusap. They were either low on fuel or shot-up and couldn't be sure of getting home safely. We also mowed a fake runway nearby to confuse the Japanese to make them think the base was bigger than it actually was."
American Units Based at Tsili Tsili
2nd Air Task Force (formed at Tsili Tsili for operations against Lae) August 5, 1943
54th TCW, 65th TCS (C-47s) from Port Moresby Sept 18 - Oct 31, 1943 to Nadzab
35th FG HQ from Port Moresby August 15, 1943 - ?
35th FG 40th FS from Port Moresby August 14, 1943 - Oct 1943 to Nadzab
35th FG 41st FS from Port Moresby August 14, 1943 - Oct 1943 to Nadzab
49th FG, 8th FS (P-40) from Dobodura August 30 - Oct 29 1943 to Gusap
433rd TCG (C-47s) ? - June 2, 1944 to Nadzab
Japanese Air Raids Against Tsili Tsili
August 15 - September 13, 1943
P-40N-5 Serial Number 42-104961
Today
The airfield has been abandoned since the war. Until the early 1970s there were several wrecks at the strip, four P-39s and a P-40 abandoned there. Three aircraft were recovered by Monty Armstrong and Charles Darby in 1973 for Yesterday's Air Force.
info from
http://www.pacificwrecks.com/provinces/png_tsilitsili.html